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[COVID-19 Virus] The Sinkies are fucked Thread.

Hanslesley73

Alfrescian
Loyal
not racist n keep pointing finger at our fellow indian bros ..as if they are the only one breaking rules n ur ccp chinese n us singaporeans very innocent n discipline no break covid laws???

cb u marder fker.. i got more evidence to prove if i want to how many of your ccp chinese are the one breaking covid rules ..and us singaporean chinese also not following rules set by our gov.

want to point finger at others u better look at urself first.

if i were to take video of wat i seen around...u be surprised ur ccp chinese here im sg n us chinese also got lots of them breaking rules risk spreading covid.

knn u cb wumao kia.go to hell la.
I am sorry that my words have deeply and personally affected you. It was not meant to be hurtful nor racist. It stems from my care and concern for the safety of elderly folks here like my mother. We are a little red dot on the map, with a burgeoning, dense population. Singapore will most likely struggle if what is happening in India happens here.
 
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zhihau

Super Moderator
SuperMod
Asset
Maldives spared from the latest announcements...

漏网之鱼,疏而不漏。切记,切记。
 

Hanslesley73

Alfrescian
Loyal
Maldives spared from the latest announcements...

漏网之鱼,疏而不漏。切记,切记。
They probably do not know how to execute swab tests effectively. Different country, different culture.
I highly suspect that triple threat is at large in Maldives now.
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
I suspect that the ICA and TTSH clusters may be linked. :confused::confused::confused:

The spouse of the ICA officer is a nurse at TTSH. Based on initial investigations by MOH, there is no link......................... yet........................... :cautious:

From MOH report 29 April 2021:

Case 62583

Case 62583 is a 32 year-old female Singaporean who works as a nurse at TTSH. She is the spouse of Case 62517. As she had been identified as his close contact, she was placed on quarantine on 28 April. She is asymptomatic, but was tested for COVID-19 during quarantine and her test result came back positive. She does not work in Ward 9D or Ward 7D. Based on our epidemiological investigation, there is no link between Case 62583 and the TTSH cluster. However, the testing of all staff in TTSH wards will serve as an additional check on this.
 

zhihau

Super Moderator
SuperMod
Asset
The spouse of the ICA officer is a nurse at TTSH. Based on initial investigations by MOH, there is no link......................... yet........................... :cautious:

From MOH report 29 April 2021:

the phylogentic tests on the strains can yield conclusive results. B.1.617? or other variants?
 

mojito

Alfrescian
Loyal
This 14 days window period is too short, anyone from India within the last 30 days should be barred from entering Sinkiestan or be in transit.

Look at Nepal and Sri Lanka, sudden surge in COVID numbers.
They are risk profile different from India, no? :unsure:
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
With more n more ttsh staff on MC..how will the hospital cope in its daily operations?

COVID-19: Staff placed on leave of absence, 4 wards locked down as Tan Tock Seng Hospital moves to contain cluster
COVID-19 MTF press conference on Apr 30 TTSH CEO
Tan Tock Seng Hospital CEO Eugene Soh speaks during a COVID-19 multi-ministry task force press conference on Apr 30, 2021.
Bookmark
SINGAPORE: A total of 76 members of staff at Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH) have been placed on leave of absence after a cluster of COVID-19 cases was detected, said the hospital's CEO Dr Eugene Soh on Friday (Apr 30).

Speaking at a press conference by the COVID-19 multi-ministry task force, Dr Soh said the growing cluster is of particular concern, and the hospital is “acting fast with a three-pronged approach” to contain and control infections, while securing the safety of patients and staff members.

READ: Public places visited by COVID-19 cases in Tan Tock Seng Hospital cluster to close for 2 days
The first step includes immediate containment measures to treat and isolate staff members or patients, said Dr Soh.

“We have also identified patients and staff who are close contacts of the positive cases. Today, we have transferred 61 patients, including the confirmed patients to the National Centre for Infectious Diseases (NCID).

“We have since also placed 76 of our staff who have been in close contact on leave of absence (LOA), awaiting their quarantine orders based on further contact tracing,” said Dr Soh.

But he anticipates that possibly "a couple of hundred" staff members could be placed on LOA as contact tracing continues.

READ: 'I'm used to it already': Tan Tock Seng Hospital staff on the risks of working at the heart of a COVID-19 cluster
To deal with the manpower situation, the hospital has reduced non-urgent electives, and re-directed non life-threatening Accident & Emergency cases to other hospitals.

In addition, outpatient appointments are being reviewed, with less urgent ones to be rescheduled.

A total of four hospital wards have now been locked down, Dr Soh said, up from two wards on Thursday.

This mean there will be no movement in and out of those wards, Dr Soh explained.

"Even then, when we do move (patients for essential testing), we take full precautions in moving them. That is essential for us to put a barrier here to make sure that we keep the patients in the ward safe, as well as keep those outside the wards safe," he said.

There is also a dedicated team of staff members caring for patients in these wards.

Other patients and staff members in these wards have been swabbed. “So far, the first swab results for these other patients are all negative. They are being monitored actively for their health and well-being,” said Dr Soh.

SURVEILLANCE MEASURES

Dr Soh added that the hospital has stepped up clinical surveillance of all inpatients who develop fever or related symptoms.

“However, patients with COVID-19 may be asymptomatic. And hence, this underlies the challenges with the diagnosis and surveillance of these patients,” he added.


Members of staff at TTSH have also been reminded to be vigilant with their twice-daily temperature taking, and to see on-site healthcare workers if they are unwell.

Compliance with safety and hygiene measures has also been reinforced, Dr Soh said. In addition, the hospital is cleaning and disinfecting more frequently, including for the wards that have been locked down.

CASTING THE NET WIDER

Dr Soh said there are currently 1,100 inpatients and 4,500 staff members working at inpatient wards at the hospital – all of whom will be swabbed.

All inpatients will be swabbed by Friday evening, while the group of 4,500 employees will complete their swab tests by the weekend, Dr Soh added.

Visitors are not allowed at the hospital except on a case-by-case basis for patients who are critically ill.

“While the above measures are to contain, control and cast a wide net, we may pick up further cases, which we will quickly isolate (after which we will) lock down the ward concerned.

“We have also mobilised our patient officers and welfare officers to support the wellbeing of our patients and the staff during this period,” Dr Soh said.

4 WORKERS AND 2 PATIENTS HAD BEEN VACCINATED

Associate Professor Kenneth Mak, the Health Ministry’s director of medical services, also provided more details on the cases in the TTSH cluster.

Of the 13 cases, five are TTSH employees, comprising two doctors, one nurse, one healthcare assistant and one cleaner who worked in the ward where the cluster first emerged.

READ: 9 new COVID-19 community cases, including 4 linked to Tan Tock Seng Hospital cluster
Four out of five had been vaccinated, he said.

The remaining eight are patients - seven of whom were from Ward 9D, where the cluster had emerged, while another was from Ward 9C.

Out of the eight, one patient had received both doses of the vaccine, while another had only received one.

Assoc Prof Mak said those who received vaccinations derived some level of immune protection from the vaccines.

“But as is illustrated by this cluster, vaccination doesn't provide 100 per cent protection. It increases your resistance to getting symptomatic infections, it reduces the risk of you getting an infection and spreading that.

“And the vaccinations would remain protective for the wide majority of the population and staff who had received those vaccinations,” he explained.

He added that preliminary investigations have been done and will continue to be carried out.

“So far, there are no issues with the quality of the vaccine that they have received, nor any concerns about the cold chain supply of vaccines to the vaccination centres where they had received the vaccination,” he said.

“It is certainly a possibility that these reflect vaccination breakthrough cases, but require further study before we can properly characterise them, and this is ongoing.”

READ: Singapore to bar visitors from Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka
WORKING WITH OTHER HEALTHCARE INSTITUTIONS

Assoc Prof Mak added that TTSH is working with other healthcare institutions, which have been reminded to stay vigilant in the surveillance of patients who have symptoms of the virus.

They also remain ready to receive and treat any patient with COVID-19 infection, he said, adding that “they all have COVID-19 beds and resources on standby”.

“We have also asked them to be on standby to support Tan Tock Seng in its management of this outbreak. And if necessary, we will augment the hospital with additional resources to ensure that care of patients in the hospital is not compromised,” he said.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
As long as everyone wears a mask everything will be fine so don't worry. Transmission is VERY low if everyone wears masks.

1619811044903.png
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
With more n more ttsh staff on MC..how will the hospital cope in its daily operations?

COVID-19: Staff placed on leave of absence, 4 wards locked down as Tan Tock Seng Hospital moves to contain cluster

Thank God for talented people like Lawrence Wong and Gan Kim Yong to head our covid response team. We'll have enough manpower, even if it means redeploying medics from the SAF and SCDF to TTSH.
 

Ralders

Alfrescian
Loyal
SINGAPORE - Four wards in Tan Tock Seng Hospital (TTSH) have been locked down following the detection of a cluster of 13 cases there.

Singapore expects to detect more Covid-19 cases linked to this cluster in the coming days, and may take more stringent measures should widespread transmission be found, said Health Minister Gan Kim Yong on Friday (April 30).

He added that all public places visited by the cases during the time they were likely infectious will be closed for two days for cleaning. This will help reduce the chance of the virus spreading from undetected cases in the community, and also help facilitate the testing of staff, Mr Gan said.
 

Ralders

Alfrescian
Loyal
The minister, who along with Education Minister Lawrence Wong, co-chairs the multi-ministerial task force tackling the pandemic, was addressing reporters at a virtual press conference.

The Health Ministry will be carrying out surveillance testing for patients who have recently been discharged from TTSH, as well as people who had visited the hospital on or after April 18.

All close contacts of the identified cases, including patients, visitors and staff who have been in the affected wards, have been placed under quarantine.

These recent cases are another reminder that the virus is alive and circulating," Mr Gan said, urging Singaporeans to continue to be socially responsible and stick to the safe management measures, even if they have been vaccinated.

The TTSH cluster consists of five staff members - two doctors, a nurse, a healthcare assistant and a cleaner - and eight patients.

Four staff members and one patient had been fully vaccinated against Covid-19, while another patient had received one dose.
 

Leongsam

High Order Twit / Low SES subject
Admin
Asset
Just wear a mask. Masks are more effective than vaccines. :roflmao:


CDC director says masks more guaranteed to work than a vaccine
By Peter Sullivan - 09/16/20 12:11 PM EDT 1,517





Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Robert Redfield said Wednesday that wearing a mask is more guaranteed to protect someone from the coronavirus than taking a vaccine.

Redfield, speaking at a Senate hearing, emphasized the importance of wearing masks, noting that an eventual vaccine is not expected to work in 100 percent of people, and might only work in, say, 70 percent. But a mask is guaranteed to offer at least some protection for all wearers, he added, though it is far from total protection.

"We have clear scientific evidence they work, I might even go so far as to say that this face mask is more guaranteed to protect me against COVID than when I take a COVID vaccine, because the immunogenicity may be 70 percent and if I don't get an immune response, the vaccine's not going to protect me, this face mask will," Redfield said.
 
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